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Ninety-two years ago in 1905, Beullah Lewellen (Toliver)
moved with her family to the Roberts community and
began school there. The Roberts
community was located several miles southeast of
what is now Weinert.
(see
Maud & Cal Lewellen
Bio Sketch)
The
Roberts school was two years old when the Lewellens
moved to Haskell County, with one room "about the
size of a large living room" and about thirty-five
students enrolled. Mrs. Toliver
remembers that the school looked "more like a barn
than a school" because it was never painted.
But soon after Mrs. Toliver began school a two-room
building was constructed and then in 1912, Roberts
shool was at its largest when 82 students were
enrolled.
It would
be in 1936 when, with 47 students, the Roberts
School District voted to consolidate with Vontress,
Cottonwood and Pleasant Valley to form the Mattson
High School at the common corner of the four school
districts.
Mrs.
Toliver remembers that school began in September,
but was dismissed again for two months in October
for cotton picking. Then, about Christmas,
school would start again and be in session until
summer. "Very few people ever finished school
- there was too much work to be done at home", Mrs.
Toliver said. "I stayed at home at least one
day every week helping Mother do the washing on a
rub board.
Four main
subjects were taught: the three R's (reading
writing and arithmetic) and spelling. "We used
to have spelling bees and arithmetic contests for
entertainment" she said. "I was
good at math but I never was much of a speller".
Recess was a favorite time of day.
Baseball was the most popular sport. "Wolf
Over the River" and "Annie Over the Schoolhouse"
were other recess games.
The
attendance at school was very high even though
students had to walk to get there - sometimes up to
three miles each way. Mrs. Toliver
remembers that everyone was happy to be there.
Families were close and often ate together and the
children were happy to be together at school.
Teachers
were paid between $75 and $100 per month which was a
low salary even for that time, Mrs. Toliver
explained. "We made or grew most things and
what we had to buy didn't cost much. It didn't
take much money to get by". In the book
"Cowpokes and Sodbusters" by R. S. Sanders, a list
of teachers at the Roberts school shows that almost
every teacher stayed only one year at the
school....the longest stay being only three years.
Students
had a great respect for their teachers. "It
was always very quiet and very orderly in the
schoolhouse. There was never any racket
or scuffling. We had to raise our hands and we
would get into trouble if we snapped our fingers to
get the teacher's attention" said Mrs. Toliver.
A common punishment was to make a misbehaving
student stand with his or her nose in the corner or
on the wall. The only time Mrs.
Toliver had to put her nose in the corner was
because the picture man was due to come and an older
girl told her to go look out the window to see if he
was coming. She had to stand with her
nose in the corner for that and was still there when
he arrived. "Sometimes there would be
four or five students up there at once" she said.
When
asked what the most important thing she learned from
school, Mrs. Toliver had to think a moment.
"Everything was important to me then" she
remembered. There were several close
friends of hers and they were almost inseparable.
She loved to read and that was her best subject.
She said she also helped the teacher when she was
older and that responsibility was very important to
her.
Advice
for kids today? Mrs. Toliver said "Be
honest and pay attention to what your
mother and daddy teach you".
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